Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Just about like everyone walking around, I’d heard of
Oysters Rockefeller all of my life, but for whatever reason I’d never eaten
any. I’m pretty sure that the only reason I’d never tried them was mostly
because I’d never been anywhere that served them. I put them on my “bucket
list” several years ago, and finally got the chance to eat some the other day.

For those of you unfamiliar with Oysters Rockefeller, they
are oysters on a half-shell and usually topped with parsley, butter, bread
crumbs and sometimes cheese. The oyster itself is usually either baked or
broiled. Around where I live, about the only place you can get them is at a
seafood restaurant.

My interest in eating Oysters Rockefeller really ramped up
when my buddy Gilbert Harden came back from Pensacola a while back regaling me
with tales of the delicious Oysters Rockefellers he’d eaten there. With that in
mind, a week or so ago, my wife and I went to the Wintzel’s Oyster House in
Greenville, Ala. Not long after we arrived, I noticed that they had Oysters
Rockefeller on the menu, so I ordered half a dozen to see what all the fuss was
about.

I ate my six Oysters Rockefeller slowly, savoring them as I
slowly thought about their taste and texture. I thought they were really,
really good with a cheesy vegetable taste with an aftertaste that reminded me
of Parmesan. I’d eat them again in a heartbeat, but my wife declined my
repeated offers to try one.

While researching this bucket list item, I was interested to
learn that Oysters Rockefeller, despite its New England-sounding name, is
actually a Southern dish. It was created in 1899 by Jules Alciatore, who worked
at his father’s restaurant, Antoine’s in New Orleans. This famous restaurant
has been serving Oysters Rockefeller for the past 118 years and the estimate
that they’ve served nearly four million over the years.

I’ve always been somewhat curious about how this oyster dish
got its name, which always made me think about the wealthy Rockefeller, which
is also probably why I thought the dish had New England roots. As it turns out,
the dish was named after John D. Rockefeller, who happened to be one of the
wealthiest men in American in the 1890s. Rockefeller, who died at the age of 97
in 1937, made a huge fortune in the oil business.

There is no doubt in my mind that I would try Oysters
Rockefeller again if given the opportunity. In fact, I think I could easily eat
more than half a dozen because I still had room left for more after my recent trip
to Wintzel’s in Evergreen. Off the top of my head, I bet I could eat 18 or more
at one sitting and not be overly stuffed.

In the end, how many of you have eaten “Oysters
Rockefeller”? What did you think about it? What other unusual foods would you
recommend trying? Let us know in the comments section below.

Evergreen weather observer
Harry Ellis reported .03 inches of rain on Feb. 23 and .55 inches on Feb. 27.
He reported a high of 78 degrees on Feb. 26 and a low of 28 degrees on Feb. 22.
Total rainfall for the month of February was 1.51 inches.

The 54th Annual
Conecuh County 4-H/Future Farmers of America Steer and Heifer Show will be held
this Sat., March 6, 1999 at the Evergreen Stockyard Livestock Arena.

Exhibitors this year in the
Steer category are: Brandon Coleman, Christopher Garner and Ashton Garner, all
of Castleberry; Clint Casey of Bermuda; Noel Goneke and Chip Stacey of
Lyeffion, Michael Landon and Chris Landon of Evergreen; and Carolyn Pritchett
of Brooklyn.

In the Heifer show, exhibitors
will be Noel Goneke and Chip Stacey, Georgeanne Pritchett and Christopher
Garner.

The event begins promptly at
9 a.m. with the official weigh-in. The Heifer Show follows at 1 p.m., which is
immediately followed by the Steer Show.

At 6:30 p.m., following the
steer show, the sale will be held.

The annual event is sponsored
by the Conecuh County Steer Show Committee and the State Department of
Agriculture and Industries in cooperation with the Alabama Cooperative
Extension System and the State Department of Education Agri-Science and
Technology Education.

In honor of Evergreen being
named a Tree City USA Forester Victor Howell planted a tree with the aid of
some special guests at Evergreen City School. Pictured Anita Watson, principal
at ECS; Peggy Howell, City of Evergreen; Chief Lynn Taylor, James North,
Forestry Commission; Mayor Lomax Cassady and Smokey Bear.

43 YEARS AGO

MARCH 7, 1974

Young black man reported missing: Allen Sanders Jr.,
25-year-old black male, has disappeared according to members of his family. He
was last seen Feb. 24. At that time, he was wearing a western jacket and
western jeans.

Sanders is five feet, five inches tall and weighs 115 to
120 pounds. He has a light black complexion, black hair and brown eyes.

Anyone having any information as to his whereabouts is
asked to contact Sheriff James M. (Shorty) Brock’s office.

Booker was elected president
of the class of 37 and was presented a certificate of achievement for
outstanding service and accomplishments as a student in the Law Enforcement
Training Program. Circuit Judge Robert E.L. Key of Evergreen, the commencement
speaker, made the presentation to Booker.

Booker was also commended by
his instructors for maintaining an average of 96 out of a possible 100 in the
course.

Evergreen Mayor and Mrs.
Henry Sessions, Chief of Police James Ellis and two sons, Policeman Ernest
Sexton and Booker’s wife, Ruby, and their two daughters attended the graduation
program.

The Spring Term of Circuit
Court will begin here Monday morning in the Conecuh County Courthouse with
Circuit Judge Robert E.L. Key presiding.

68 YEARS AGO

MARCH 3, 1949

CARL L. NALL: Funeral services for S 1/c Carl L. Nall,
who was killed in action in the Pacific theatre in the recent World War, will
be held from Ramer Church Saturday at 11 a.m. with full military honors.
Officiating will be Rev. J.L. Higdon and Elder A.J. Parrish with Cope Funeral
Home in charge of arrangements.

The Conecuh County grand jury in session last week
examined 48 witnesses and returned only six true bills which was probably the
smallest number of indictments ever returned by a grand jury in this county.

Among the indictments returned were two for second degree
murder against Mrs. Mary Sue Waller and her son, John D. Chunn, who are charged
with killing Willie Blake on Christmas Day. Blake was Mrs. Waller’s son-in-law.
This case has been set for trial next Wed., March 9.

Other cases of general interest to be tried at the
criminal session next week are:

The State of Alabama vs. Ebb Hoomes, who is charged with
murder, moved here on a change of venue from Escambia County. The case was
reversed by the Supreme Court and is set for retrial next Thurs., March 10.

The State of Alabama vs. Clyde Johnson, charged with
murder in the second degree, is set for Mon., March 7.

The State of Alabama vs. Burley Jackson, charged with
manslaughter in the first degree, is set for Tues., March 8.

93 YEARS AGO

MARCH 5, 1924

Birmingham Flyers Land Here
Saturday: Saturday morning at 10:30 o’clock, the Birmingham escadrille, 106th
Observation Squadron, Alabama National Guard, from Roberts Field, Birmingham,
landed on the field of Troop 55, Machine Gun Squadron, here. The flyers were
guests of the local guard officers. The four planes were in command of Capt.
Sumter Smith and with him were lieutenants Price, Jonds, Babson and Kirkham and
sergeants Parsons, Gobbert and Elder. The aviators were shown around the city
and were luncheon guests at the Evergreen hotel. Their departure was made at
1:30 p.m. Capt. Smith and his officers were on their way to Mobile for the
aerial meet at Mardi Gras.

Leon Layfield pleaded guilty
to the murder of Melvin Brantley in the circuit court at Mobile last week and
was sentenced to imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary. The youthful
murderer refused to reveal the reasons that prompted him to take the life of
his companion. Young Brantley’s body was found about a week after the crime in
a swamp near Tensaw river with eight bullet wounds from a 22-calibre rifle in
his head. The murder was committed in November last. Young Brantley was born
and reared in Beat One of this county.

Charles B. Savage, long a
prominent citizen of Evergreen, died on Monday at his home in Brundidge. The
news of his death came in a telegram to Judge Dunn from Mrs. Savage. The
funeral occurred on Tuesday morning at Brundidge.

Feb. 28, 1533 – Essayist Michel de Montaigne was born in
Perigord in Bordeaux, France.

Feb. 28, 1692 - In Salem, Massachusetts 10 children identify
the "witches" in their community who afflicted them: Sarah Good, Sarah
Osborne and an old Native American woman named Tituba. Warrants were obtained,
and they were arrested.

Feb. 28, 1766 - Revolutionary War soldier and Georgia
Governor John Clarke was born in Edgecombe County, North Carolina. Clarke
County, Ala. was named in his honor on Dec. 10, 1812.

Feb. 28, 1784 - John Wesley chartered the first Methodist Church
in the United States.

Feb. 28, 1824 - Charles Blondin, the first person to walk
across Niagra Falls on a tightrope, was born in St Omer, Pas-de-Calais, France.

Feb. 28, 1827 - The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad became the
first railroad incorporated for the commercial transportation of people and
freight.

Feb. 28, 1829 – Edgar Allan Poe’s foster mother, Frances
Allan, died.

Feb. 28, 1834 – Charles Pawson Atmore was born on the island
of Guernsey. Atmore, Ala. would later be named in his honor.

Feb. 28, 1840 – French explorer Henri Duveyrier was born in
Paris, France.

Feb. 28, 1855 – Hinchey W. Warren passed away at the age of
67 near Sparta, Ala. and was buried in the Warren Family Cemetery. A War of
1812 veteran, he was also the great-grandfather of U.S. President Warren G.
Harding.

Feb. 28, 1858 – The ill-fated Eliza Battle left Demopolis,
Ala. fully loaded with passengers and with more than 1,200 bales of cotton.
During an already cold night, a strong north wind began to blow, with the air
temperature decreasing another 40°F in the two hours after nightfall.(13
Alabama Ghosts)

Feb. 28, 1861 - The U.S. territory of Colorado was
organized.

Feb. 28, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought near Fayetteville, Ark., at Osage Springs. Federal
operations at New Madrid, Mo. and Island Number 10 began. Charleston, Va. was
occupied by Federal forces.

Feb. 28, 1863 – During the Civil
War, the Federal naval attacked Fort McAllister, Ga., and a Naval encounter
occurred on the Ogeechee River, south of Savannah, Ga. A skirmish was also
fought out from Fort Gibson in the Indian Territory.

Feb. 28, 1864 – After getting captured by the Union at
Campbell’s Station, Noah Dallas Peacock (Lewis Lavon Peacock’s older brother)
was transferred from Asylum General Hospital in Nashville to Louisville
Military Prison.

Feb. 28, 1864 - A major Union cavalry raid began when
General Hugh Judson Kilpatrick led 3,500 troopers south from Stevensburg,
Virginia. Aimed at Richmond, the raid sought to free Federal prisoners and
spread word of President Abraham Lincoln's Proclamation of Amnesty and
Reconstruction in hopes of convincing Confederates to lay down their arms.
Kilpatrick took with him Colonel Ulrich Dahlgren to conduct the prisoner
release while Kilpatrick covered him with the main force

Feb. 28, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought along the Peal River and at Yazoo City, Miss.; at
Dukedom Tenn.; and at Ely’s Ford, Va. A Federal operation took place in
Gloucester County and Albermarle County, Va.

Feb. 28, 1865 – During the Civil
War, Nathan Bedford Forrest was finally appointed Lieutenant General, and a
skirmish was fought in the vicinity of Cheraw and Rocky Mount, S.C.

Feb. 28, 1872 - John Gassaway Rush passed away at the age of
54 and was buried in McIntosh Cemetery, which is located behind Andrews Chapel
in McIntosh, Ala. In 1860, he and his wife donated the land where the church
was constructed.

Feb. 28, 1887 - Alabama passed its first child labor law,
fixing age limits and restricting work hours for certain types of labor. The
legislation, which also protected women workers, was repealed in the 1890s, but
efforts of reformers like Rev. Edgar Gardner Murphy of Montgomery resulted in
new child labor laws during the first two decades of the 20th century.

Feb. 28, 1894 – Novelist, playwright and screenwriter Ben
Hecht was born in New York City.

Feb., 28, 1895 – The Monroe Journal reported that “a little
colored girl was shot and killed by her brother near Perdue Hill last week. The
two children were playing with an old gun which went off with the above
result.”

Feb. 28, 1901 – The Town of Beatrice, Ala. was officially
incorporated as a municipality. While the Selma to Pensacola branch of the
Louisville & Nashville Railroad was being built, the general superintendent
of construction, a Col. Seymour of Nashville, Tenn., asked that the town
growing up around the station in present-day Beatrice be named for his
granddaughter, Beatrice Seymour. The Beatrice post office was established in
1900. (Places Names in Alabama)

Feb. 28, 1901 – According to the Alabama League of
Municipalities, Opp was officially incorporated as a municipality.

Feb. 28, 1906 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
Evergreen Bottling Co. had opened a supply depot next door to McNutt’s barber
shop, and was prepared to supply dealers with bottled soda water, ginger ale,
etc. on short notice.

Feb. 28, 1906 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Frank
Simmons of Evergreen, Ala. had brought the newspaper a 9-1/2 pound “monster
turnip” that was bigger than the 7-3/4 pound turnip recently grown by J.J.
Pearce of Bowles.

Feb. 28, 1906 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the Daughters
of the Confederacy planned to make a donation to the Soldiers’ Home at Mountain
Creek and earnestly desired the cooperation of every Confederate veteran. All
contributions were to be left at the McCreary Drug Store. Mrs. M. McCreary was
President of the U.D.C. and Mrs. Edwin C. Page was Corresponding Secretary.

Feb. 28, 1915 - Asa Goodwin, the oldest man in Alabama, died
at Bessemer, Ala. on the eve of his 108th birthday. He was born in Henry
County, Ga. in 1807 and had lived since 1829 in Alabama and Mississippi. He was
survived by one son, 74 grandchildren, 227 great-grandchildren and 15
great-great-grandchildren.

Feb. 28, 1916 - Riley Kelly and W.R. Manning of Excel, Ala.
transacted business in Monroeville on this Monday.

Feb. 28, 1916 – Around noon on this Monday, a fire broke out
on the roof of M.M. Fountain’s cook room and threatened to destroy his house.
According to The Monroe Journal, “half a hundred citizens and visitors quickly
resolved themselves into a bucket brigade and the fire was soon extinguished
with slight damage.”

Feb. 28, 1916 – The L&N Railroad depot and freight house
at Monroe, together with all office furniture and supplies, were destroyed by
fire on this Monday night. There was only a small quantity of freight in the
warehouse at the time so the loss, aside from the building, was not heavy. The
fire was discovered at a late hour of the night by Mr. W.R. Shirley but was
already beyond control. It was believed that the building caught fire from an
overcharged telegraph wire, as an electric storm prevailed at an earlier hour
of the night.

Feb. 28, 1916 - Allied forces completed their conquest of the Cameroons, a
German protectorate on the coast of western Africa.

Feb. 28, 1918 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Edward E.
English of Evergreen, Ala. “died in an accident.”

Feb. 28, 1921 – H.P. Lovecraft completed “The Quest of
Iranon,” which was originally published in the July-August 1935 issue of The
Galleon.

Feb. 28, 1925 – In Lovecraftian fiction, the lost island of
R’lyeh rose once again.

Feb. 28, 1930 – Major League Baseball third baseman Frank
Malzone was born in Bronx, N.Y. He would go on to play for the Boston Red Sox
and the California Angels.

Feb. 28, 1932 – H.P. Lovecraft completed “The Dreams in the
Witch House,” which was originally published in the July 1933 issue of Weird
Tales.

Feb. 28, 1933 – The Reichstag Fire Decree was passed in Germany,
a day after the Reichstag fire.

Feb. 28, 1945 – NFL defensive end Bubba Smith was born in
Orange, Texas. He would go on to play for Michigan State, the Baltimore Colts,
the Oakland Raiders and the Houston Oilers.

Feb. 28, 1947 – Major League Baseball shortstop and second
baseman Marty Perez was born in Visalia, Calif. He would go on to play for the
California Angels, the Atlanta Braves, the San Francisco Giants, the New York
Yankees and the Oakland Athletics.

Feb. 28, 1952 – The Evergreen Courant reported that PFC
William Howard Peacock of Route One, Owasssa, Ala., was preparing to return to
Fort Campbell, Ky. from Camp Drum, N.Y. after several weeks of extensive cold
weather warfare training in Exercise Snow Fall in northern New York state.
Peacock was a member of the 11th Airborne Division and a gunner with the 188th
Airborne Regiment’s Support Command. He attended Evergreen High School, entered
the Army in 1949 and completed Parachutist School at Fort Benning, Ga.

Feb. 28, 1953 – NFL running back Roland Harper was born in
Seguin, Texas. He would go on to play for Louisiana Tech and the Chicago Bears.

Feb. 28, 1953 - In a Cambridge University laboratory,
scientists James D. Watson and Francis H.C. Crick discovered the double-helix
structure of DNA.

Feb. 28, 1964 - A television version of Alabama author
Ambrose Bierce's story "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" was
broadcast as part of the series “The
Twilight Zone.”

Feb. 28, 1965 – National Book Award-winning novelist Colum
McCann was born in Dublin.

Feb. 28, 1968 - General Earle
Wheeler, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, returned from his recent round
of talks with General William Westmoreland in Saigon and immediately delivered
a written report to President Lyndon B. Johnson, stated that despite the heavy
casualties incurred during the Tet Offensive, North Vietnam and Viet Cong
forces had the initiative and were “operating with relative freedom in the
countryside.”

Feb. 28, 1980 – Evergreen High School’s varsity basketball
team, led by head coach Charles Branum, beat Wilcox County, 81-51, in the
opening round of the area tournament, which was played at W.S. Neal High School
in East Brewton, Ala. Horace Smith and Perona Rankins led Evergreen with 26
points and 22 points, respectively. Others scoring were Joe Mitchell, 12;
Sanford Moye, six; David Floyd, five; Philander Rogers, two; Johnny Allen, two;
Anthony Williams, two; Arturo Scott, two; and Michael Lampley, two.

Feb. 28, 1980 – Evergreen, Ala. radio station WBLO began
broadcasting after being off the air since Feb. 16 so that broadcast equipment
could be repaired and improved and the station’s signal expanded. John Bolton
was the station’s DJ.

Feb. 28, 1988 - A television version of Alabama author
Borden Deal's book “Bluegrass”
was broadcast.

Feb. 28, 1991 – The first Gulf War ended as U.S. President
George H.W. Bush declared a cease-fire, and Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein pledged
to honor future United Nations peace terms.

Feb. 28, 1993 – Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
agents raided the Branch Davidian church in Waco, Texas with a warrant to
arrest the group's leader David Koresh. Four BATF agents and five Davidians
died in the initial raid, starting a 51-day standoff.

Feb. 28, 1995 - The Monroe County Hospital Board on this
Tuesday approved a new chief financial officer (CFO). Nellie Chunn, 24, of
Rocky Hill was recommended by Administrator Floyd Price to replace Chris Johns
as CFO. Chunn had worked as accounting manager at the hospital for the previous
three years. Chunn was a 1992 graduate of Troy State University with a degree
in computer science and accounting and a graduate of J.U. Blacksher High
School. She was selected from six applicants interviewed.

Feb. 28, 2002 - It was announced that John Madden would be
replacing Dennis Miller on "Monday Night Football." Madden signed a
four-year $20 million deal with ABC Sports.

Notes: Today is the 59th day of 2017 and the 69th day of Winter. There are 306 days left in the year.

Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily,
just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway
84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon
87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No.
AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.

Monday, February 27, 2017

Hillcrest Jaguars defeat
Georgiana, 8-2, on Feb. 26: Hillcrest High School won their first home game of
the 1999 baseball season against Georgiana High School, 8-2, on Fri., Feb. 26.
Alvis Griffin and Keith Kent combined to keep Georgiana to a total of seven
hits and two runs.

Alvis pitched four innings
and gave up five hits, one run and four strikeouts. Keith gave up two hits, one
run, one walk and six strikeouts in three innings. Both runs were unearned due
to three errors.

Josh Merrills had two RBI;
Steven Daniels, one RBI; Mario Taylor, one RBI; and Ron Grace, one RBI.

Hillcrest High School lost
their opening baseball game, 9-8, to Clarke County High School on Fri., Feb.
19, 1999 in Grove Hill.

Alvis Griffin pitched four
innings of play and gave up three runs on five hits with two strikeouts and one
walk. Keith Kent had three RBI; Kenny Riley, two RBI; and Alvis Griffin, two
RBI.

Hillcrest High School
defeated Red Level High School, 8-1, on Tues., Feb. 23, 1999 in Red Level. The
game was called after 4-1/2 innings of play because of darkness. Therefore, the
score reverted back to the last full inning.

Keith Kent gave up one run on
four hits and three strikeouts in five innings of pitching.

43 YEARS AGO

MARCH 7, 1974

It’s two years in a row for
the Evergreen High Aggies to compete in the State 3A Basketball Tournament at
the University of Alabama. Coach Charles Branum’s cagers will tangle with
Russellville at nine o’clock this morning in the opening round. They carry a
superb, 29-2, record into the state meet. The Aggies are Albert Stallworth,
Eddie Stallworth, Chuck Jones, Willie Ingram, Anthony Merrill, Coach Branum,
Donald Perkins, David Thomas, Cleve Fields, Ronald Fantroy, Alfonza Holder and
Gene Stallworth.

Aggies open play in state meet
this morning: The Evergreen High Aggies return to the state Class AAA
tournament for the second year in a row today after completing a 29-2 season.

The road to state this year
began last week with the Region 1, Area 2 tournament in Evergreen in which the
Aggies knocked off Grove Hill, 81-72, in the semi-finals and stopped arch-rival
Jackson in the finals, 65-53, playing one of their finest games of the season.

Saturday night, the Aggies
took their second straight Region 1 title by crushing the Alba Sharks, 69-43,
behind a 19-point effort by sophomore center Ronald Fantroy. Fantroy dominated
play underneath, taking the game away from Alba’s 6-8 pivotman Barry
Montgomery, an all-state and all-America candidate.

Under the coaching of Charles
Branum, the Aggies have compiled an impressive two-year record of 62 wins and
four losses, one of the top records in the state. Branum’s personal record is
187-35.

This year’s area all-star
team featured three Aggie performers: forwards David Thomas and Eddie
Stallworth and guard Cleve Fields.

68 YEARS AGO

MARCH 3, 1949

Lyeffion, Evergreen Win In
Benefit Doubleheader: The curtain fell on the 1948-49 basketball season in
Conecuh County Tuesday night at Evergreen High’s Memorial Gym and caught in its
swirl were Repton’s Bulldogs and the Blue Devils of County High at Castleberry.
Lyeffion topped Repton, 44-23, and Evergreen downed Castleberry, 55-31, before
a near capacity crowd with all proceeds divided by the March of Dimes and
Crippled Children’s Clinic.

Miller Dees paced the
Lyeffion Yellow Jackets to their win over the fighting Repton Bulldogs in the
opener. With Dees hitting for 11 the Jackets took a 15-8 lead at the quarter,
Dees hit for six in the second as Lyeffion surged to a 28-10 halftime lead.
Three more in the final two periods gave Dees a night high total of 20 points.

Bobby Thompson and Don Ivey
sparked the Repton Bulldogs. Thompson sank 11 points and Ivey eight for the
bulk of the Bulldogs’ counters. Coach Roy Davis’ five had trouble hitting their
shots. Coach Harry Engle’s boys put them in from everywhere and were especially
accurate at the foul throw line sinking 14 of 19 charity tosses.

Coach Wendell Hart’s
Evergreen Aggies went wild in the second quarter to account for 23 points as
they outscored Coach M.C. Thomasson’s County High Blue Devils, 53-31. The game
started out slowly with the score deadlocked, 7-7, at the quarter, but the Blue
Devils couldn’t match the Aggies speed in the second period and it was 30-11 at
the half.

Local fans were treated to
some of the fanciest shooting of the year as both the Aggies and Blue Devils
sent a neat percentage of their shots through the cords. Evergreen tried 58
shots from the floor with 25 good for an excellent 43 percent (normal high
school percentage ranges from 22 to 28 percent). Castleberry hit well above the
average sinking 12 of 40 for an even 30 percent.

Lee Owen (Pill) Dees,
Castleberry ace, set the pace as he topped the scorers with 18 points. Dees
sank seven field goals, all from way way out, and dropped four of five foul
shots. It was his sixth and last year of varsity basketball and he finished in
a blaze of glory.

Officials were Sauer and
Gwinn of the Central Alabama Officials Association of Montgomery.

Three County Teams Lose In
Frisco City Tourney: The three Conecuh County high schools entered in the First
District “B” Tournament at Frisco City were eliminated last weekend. Lyeffion
went to the quarterfinals for the furtherest advance made by any team.

Coach Ray Davis’s Repton
Bulldogs battled second-seeded Monroeville down to the wire but couldn’t cope
with the two-team system employed by the Monroe Countians. Monroeville finished
fourth in the tournament.

Coach M.C. Thompson’s
Castleberry Blue Devils lost a heart-breaking, 19-18, decision to fourth-seeded
Chatom. Herbert Smith shot nine points and Lee Owen (Pill) Dees eight for the
Devils. Dees, although playing in only one game, was named to a forward post on
the second string all-district team. Chatom finished second in the tournament.

Coach Harry Engle’s Lyeffion
Yellow Jackets advanced to the quarterfinals before losing to T.R. Miller High.
The Jackets trounced Excel in their opening game and gave the Millers a battle
before falling. Miller was seeded third, but were convincingly superior as they
took the title, defeating Chatom in the finals. Miller and Chatom will
represent the first district in the state “B” tournament in Tuscaloosa this
weekend.

The Evergreen squad will
carry a 16-won, seven-lost record into the tournament. They have won nine and
lost two against first district competition.

Coach Hart states that the
Aggies will go down to Mobile tonight (Thursday). He will start his usual five,
consisting of Dickey Bozeman and Billy Mudge Lee at forwards, Guerry Moorer at
center, John Greel Ralls and John Law Robinson at guards. In addition to these
starters, varsity reserves Bobby Frank Snowden and Gwyn Daniels and “B” squad
members Jeff Moorer, Bobby (Pete) Wells and Gillis (Choo-Choo) Morgan will make
the trip.

Feb. 27, 1776 – During the American Revolutionary War, 1,000
Patriots troops under the command of Richard Caswell defeated 1,600 British
Loyalist militia at the Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge in North Carolina, the
first American victory in the first organized campaign of the Revolutionary
War.

Feb. 27, 1782 – During the American Revolutionary War, the
House of Commons of Great Britain voted against further war in America.

Feb. 27, 1807 – Poet and author Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
was born in Portland, Maine. His most famous works include “Ballads and Other
Poems” (1841), “Evangeline” (1847), “The Song of Hiawatha” (1855) and “The
Courtship of Miles Standish” (1858).

Feb. 27, 1827 - The first Mardi Gras in New Orleans took
place with a group of masked and costumed students dancing through the streets.

Feb. 27, 1829 – William Barrett Travis passed his law exam
at Claiborne, Ala., allowing him to practice the profession of lawyer and attorney.

Feb. 27, 1834 – Portland, Maine native William Coombs, also
known as “The Brokenhearted Stranger,” died at Claiborne, Ala. He was buried in
the Old Cemetery at Claiborne. (Some sources say he died in 1838.)

Feb. 27, 1836 - Work continued on the batteries and
entrenchments ringing the Alamo, and Santa Anna sent foraging parties to nearby
ranches to look for supplies.

Feb. 27, 1860 – Abraham Lincoln made an anti-slavery speech
at the Cooper Union in the city of New York that was largely responsible for
his election to the Presidency. About 1,500 people were in attendance and The
New York Times reprinted the speech in its entirety.

Feb. 27, 1860 – Just moments before his speech at the Cooper
Union, Abraham Lincoln posed for the first of several portraits by noted Civil
War-era photographer Mathew Brady. Days later, the photograph was published on
the cover of Harper's Bazaar with the caption, “Hon. Abram [sic] Lincoln, of
Illinois, Republican Candidate for President.”

Feb. 27, 1862 – The Confederate
Congress gave President Jefferson Davis the authority to suspend the right (or
privilege) of habeas corpus. The right (or privilege) of habeas corpus was
enshrined in the Constitution of the Confederate States of America as well as
the one in Washington from which it came. Based on much older common law, it
required that persons only be arrested on the basis of a warrant issued by a
judge, specifying what law had been broken. Davis, actually, used this
authority much less than Lincoln eventually would.

Feb. 27, 1863 – Confederate Naval
Captain Raphael Semmes, the captain of the CSS Alabama, captured the merchant
vessel Washington with a cannonball which, Semmes wrote, “wet the people on her
poop [deck], by the spray of a shot...” The ship, undamaged, was released on a
bond.

Feb. 27, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a Federal operation was conducted out from Fort Pillow, Tenn., and a
skirmish was fought in the vicinity of Bloomington, Tenn., on the Hatchie
River. A two-day Federal reconnaissance from Centreville to Falmouth, Va.
began.

Feb. 27, 1864 – During the Civil
War, the first Northern prisoners arrived at the Confederate prison at
Andersonville, Georgia (Camp Sumter). Nearly a quarter of all inmates died in
captivity during the war. Henry Wirz, the commandant of the 16-acre prison, was
executed in the aftermath of the Civil War for the brutality and the
mistreatment committed under his command.

Feb. 27, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Pinos Altos in the Arizona Territory; at Madison
and Sharon, Miss.; near Dalton, Ga.; near Poplar Bluff, Mo.; and in the
Sequatchie Valley, Tenn. The Confederate salt works on Goose Creek, near St.
Mark’s, Fla. were destroyed.

Feb. 27, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Spring Place, Ga.; in the vicinity of Sturgeon,
Mo.; and at Mount Elon and Cloud’s House, S.C.

Feb. 27, 1865 – During the Civil War,
what would prove to be the final Federal operation in the Shenandoah Valley,
Virginia began. Spring was not quite yet come to the Shenandoah Valley of
Virginia, but Phil Sheridan’s men were stirring anyway. Ten thousand
cavalrymen, under command of Wesley Merritt, departed on this day from
Winchester, heading south. All that the Confederacy had left to oppose them
were two weak brigades, headed by Jubal Early. Merritt’s orders were to wreck
the Virginia Central Railroad, and do what damage he could to the James River
Canal.

Feb. 27, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that Marcus
Sowell left during the previous week for Jasper, Ala., where he planned to
begin reading law in the office of his brother, Col. T.L. Sowell.

Feb. 27, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
its correspondent from Manistee, that there would be preaching at Pleasant Hill
church on the first Sabbath in every month, and also the Saturday before. “We
are proud to have our noble brother Lambert to serve us, after having such a
devoted minister as brother S.P. Lindsey. Brother L. is one of our oldest and
best Ministers. We are glad to know that the Sabbath school at Pleasant Hill
continues in the afternoon. The teachers, Misses Wills and Moore, are working
earnestly.”

Feb. 27, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that J.J.
Simpson had the misfortune to lose his gin and grist mill at Repton by fire one
day during the previous week. The fire was accidental, and he had no insurance.

Feb. 27, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
unexpected death of Miss Ada Thames, who was buried at McConnico Cemetery on
Feb. 27, had “cast a halo of gloom over all her friends and relatives “at
Perdue Hill.

Feb. 27, 1902 – Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Steinbeck
was born in Salinas, Calif. His most famous works include “Tortilla Flat”
(1935), “Of Mice and Men” (1937) and “The Grapes of Wrath” (1939).

Feb. 27, 1908 - Major League Baseball adopted a sacrifice
fly rule for the first time. It was repealed, reinstated and then changed several
times before being permanently accepted in 1954.

Feb. 27, 1912 - The New York Yankees announced that they
would be wearing pinstripes on their uniforms.

Feb. 27, 1916 - After completing their conquest of Serbia and Montenegro,
the Austro-Hungarian army turned its attentions toward Albania, occupying the
coastal city of Durazzo on the Adriatic Sea.

Feb. 27, 1917 - John Connally, the
governor of Texas who was shot during the John F. Kennedy assassination, was
born in Floresville, Texas.

Feb. 27, 1919 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Sam Johnson of
Flomaton, Ala. “died from disease.”

Feb. 27, 1919 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Henry Crenshaw
of Greenville, Ala. “died from disease.”

Feb. 27, 1922 – Former Confederate soldier James Hampton
Simpson passed away at the age of 77. Born on Dec. 18, 1844, he enlisted in
Monroeville as a private in Co. F of the 36th Alabama Regiment on April 10,
1862. He surrendered at Greensboro, N.C. on April 26, 1865. After the war, he
worked as a farmer, storekeeper and grist mill operator. He is buried in the
Mexia Cemetery.

Feb. 27, 1930 – The Monroe Journal reported, under the
headline “COURT HOUSE SQUARE IS GREATLY IMPROVED,” that the “improvement of the
court house square by the additional shrubbery set out is so noticeable that we
are again referring to it. Perhaps no single improvement has changed the
appearance of things in town so much, and the visitor is bound to be favorably
impressed.”

Feb. 27, 1930 – The Monroe Journal reported, under the
headline “NEW WATER SYSTEM FOR MONROEVILLE,” that “the work of installing the
new water system for Monroeville is proceeding at a very gratifying rate. The
large mains around the square are being laid rapidly, and work of erecting the
new stand pipe is well along toward completion.”

Feb. 27, 1930 - The Alabama Military Institute Band was
scheduled to give a concert at the Frisco City High School auditorium at 10:45
a.m. Thursday.

Feb. 27-28, 1931 – The first district basketball tournament
was held in Evergreen, Ala. and included 10 teams. “Fob” James of Enterprise
was the official referee.

Feb. 27, 1933 – Germany's parliament building in Berlin, the
Reichstag, was set on fire; Marinus van der Lubbe, a young Dutch Communist
claimed responsibility. The Nazis used the fire to solidify their power and
eliminate the communists as political rivals.

Feb. 27, 1933 – Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver
Raymond Berry was born in Corpus Christi, Texas. He went on to play for
Southern Methodist and the Baltimore Colts and served as the head coach of the
New England Patriots for five seasons. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in
1973.

Feb. 27, 1950 - William Kendall “W.K.” Horton, age 86, died
at a Montgomery hospital on this Monday night following an extended illness.
Horton was a pioneer citizen and lifelong resident of Conecuh County. He was
born and reared on a farm 10 miles from Evergreen on the Brooklyn Highway and
lived there until a few years before 1950 when he moved to Evergreen. He owned
a large farm and thousands of acres of timber land and engaged in farming,
timbering and mercantile business. He also owned considerable business and
residence property in Evergreen. He was president of the Bank of Evergreen,
director of All States Life Insurance Co., Montgomery, stockholder in Andala
Co., Andalusia, and had many and varied interests elsewhere. Funeral services
were held from New Bethel Baptist Church on Wed., March 1, at 11 a.m.,
conducted by Rev. Sam Granade, pastor of the Evergreen Baptist Church.
Interment was in the family lot in Horton Cemetery.

Feb. 27, 1951 - The 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
was ratified, limiting U.S. Presidents to two terms.

Feb. 27, 1962 - South Vietnamese
President Ngo Dinh Diem survived another coup attempt when Republic of Vietnam
Air Force pilots Lieutenants Pham Phu Quoc and Nguyen Van Cu try to kill him
and his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu by bombing and strafing the presidential palace.

Feb. 27, 1963 - Mickey Mantle signed a contact worth
$100,000 with the New York Yankees.

Feb. 27, 1965 - Robert Lee Page, age 72, died at the home of
Mike O’Brien in Baker, La. on this Saturday. Page was born in Evergreen on
March 4, 1892. He was employed by the L&N Railroad Co. as train dispatcher
and telegrapher for a number of years, working at local stations from
Montgomery to Mobile, including about seven years at Georgiana. He later became
associated with the Illinois Central Railroad as train dispatcher and after 41
years service, he retired as chief train dispatcher in 1958 with a total of
more than 53 years service with two railroads.

Feb. 27, 1965 - The U.S. State
Department released a 14,000-word report entitled “Aggression from the
North–The Record of North Vietnam’s Campaign to Conquer South Vietnam.”

Feb. 27, 1969 - Communist forces
shelled 30 military installations and nine towns in South Vietnam, in what
becomes known as the “Post-Tet Offensive.”

Feb. 27, 1973 - Dick Allen of the Chicago White Sox signed a
contract worth $250,000 a year for three years.

Feb. 27, 1975 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Monroe
Academy varsity basketball team, led by Coach Melvin Middleton, won the
District 3 basketball tournament of the Alabama Private School Athletic
Association by upsetting the two teams thought most likely to win. The team
beat Escambia Academy, then upset Wilcox Academy and Fort Dale Academy. Members
of the team were Greg Petty, Chuck Lambert, Ricky Eddins, Sam Bowden, Hudson
Lazenby, David Steele, Bryant Hooks, Harold King, John Winters, Ricky Robinson
and Keith Pugh.

Feb. 27, 1976 – NFL tight end Tony Gonzalez was born in
Torrance, Calif. He would go on to play for Cal, the Kansas City Chiefs and the
Atlanta Falcons.

Feb. 27, 1978 – Liberty Chapel Church near Greenville, Ala.
was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.

Feb. 27, 1978 – The W.O. Carter Log House near Andalusia,
Ala. was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.

Feb. 27, 1991 – During the Gulf War, U.S. President George
H. W. Bush announced on U.S. television that "Kuwait is liberated. Iraq's
army is defeated. I am pleased to announce that at midnight tonight, exactly
100 hours since ground operations began and six weeks since the start of
Operation Desert Storm, all United States and coalition forces will suspend
offensive combat operations."

Feb. 27, 1995 - Dr. Stanley Barnes was one of the
featured speakers at a Black History Month program at Evergreen Junior High
School on this Monday. Dr. Douglas Littles, Dean of Students at Reid State
Technical College, was the other featured speaker.

Feb. 27-March 3, 2001 – Weather observer Harry Ellis
reported 8.76 inches of rain in Evergreen, Ala. over this five day period.
Total rainfall for the month of February 2001 was 3.18 inches.

Feb. 27, 2002 - The Houston Astros announced that they had
struck a deal with Enron to buy back the naming rights of their ballpark for
$2.1 million. The ballpark would be called "Astros Field" until a new
sponsor came along.

Feb. 27, 2003 - Emmitt Smith became a free agent for the
first time when the Dallas Cowboys released him.

Feb. 27, 2011 – National Baseball Hall of Fame center
fielder Duke Snider died at the age of 84 in Escondido, Calif. During his
career, he played for the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers, the New York Mets and
the San Francisco Giants. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1980.

Notes: Today is the 58th day of 2017 and the 68th day of Winter. There are 307 days left in the year.

Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily,
just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway
84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon
87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No.
AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.

Sunday, February 26, 2017

The Monroe Journal newspaper in Monroeville, Ala., under the
direction of editor and proprietor Q. Salter, published four editions 130 years
ago during the month of February 1887. Those issues, which were dated Feb. 3,
Feb. 10, Feb. 17 and Feb. 24, can be found on microfilm at the Monroe County
Library in Monroeville, Ala. What follows are a few news highlights from those
four editions. Enjoy.

FEB. 3, 1887

NOTICE – The Journal is considerably behind time this week
on account of the failure of our shipment of paper to reach us at the proper
time.

Sheriff Burns spent several days with his family at Newtown
Academy last week.

Mr. W.T. Nettles of Kempville, our popular county surveyor,
was in town Wednesday.

Capt. DeLoach received a fall from the steps of his store
gallery last week, severely injured his right knee, from which he has not yet
entirely recovered.

Mr. Hillary Hudson has made extensive improvements on his
place recently.

Mr. John Watts now has charge of the Repton mail route.

Burnt Corn will soon have a school to the satisfaction Burnt
Cornites, a Miss Buel of Mobile will be the teacher.

Capt. Heck Graham went to Evergreen this week on business.

Dr. R.N. McMillian of Carlisle was in town Friday.

County court will convene Monday.

Dr. S.F. Dailey of Kempville was in town Friday.

Mr. Charlie Savage of Evergreen passed through Monroeville
last Sunday on his way to Perdue Hill to visit his father, Col. H.J. Savage.

FEB. 10, 1887

The County Medical Society met in Monroeville Monday.

Sheriff Burns returned Sunday from a brief visit to
Montgomery.

There are four prisoners confined in the county jail,
partaking of and enjoying the county’s hospitality.

Capt. W.S. Wiggins went to Mobile Sunday to purchase a stock
of spring goods, groceries and plantation supplies.

Rev. B.J. Skinner will preach at the Baptist church Saturday
and Sunday at 11 a.m.

Mr. J.H. Moore, the popular proprietor of the Claiborne
Lower Warehouse, gave The Journal a pleasant call Tuesday.

Mr. W.M. Webb, principal of the Perdue Hill High School and
a polished young gentleman, was in Monroeville last Saturday.

G.W. Gaillard, Perdue Hill’s favorite young doctor, gave The
Journal a call Monday.

County Court convened Monday, Judge W.C. Sowell presiding.

Capt. T.A. Nettles, the live and progressive merchant of
Longstreet, Kempville, was in attendance upon the county court Monday.

A bill was passed by the House last Saturday, appropriating 5,000
dollars to the building of the Confederate Monument. The bill now goes to the
Senate for final action.

A number of young people of this place will attend the Mardi
Gras at Mobile on the 22nd.

Capt. C.W. Locklin of Perdue Hill, a member of our efficient
board of commissioners, was in attendance last week.

Perdue Hill – Rev. W.A. Lock is arranging the “Cotter Hotel”
for use as a private residence, which he and his family will soon occupy.

Mr. John McDuffie of River Ridge was in town Monday.

Tax assessor Jones spent several days with his family last
week.

Sheriff Burns treated himself to a fine saddle horse while
in Montgomery recently.

The board of commissioners met Monday with a full
attendance.

The commissioners devoted Monday to the consideration and
disposal of pauper claims.

Rev. B.J. Skinner filled his regular appointment at the
Baptist church Saturday and Sunday.

Dr. R.I. Draughon of Perdue Hill was in town last week.

Bermuda – Capt. Heck Graham has sold out and is going to Evergreen.

FEB. 24, 1887

We offer as an excuse for the scarcity of local and editorial
matter and the delay in issuing The Journal this week that the proprietor,
editor, reporters, foreman, compositors and devil – two persons in all – have been
“taking in” the Mardi Gras at Mobile and did not return until Wednesday
evening. We will try to make it up in our next issue.

Louise Henderson, a colored woman, was found dead near
Hatters mill, about four miles from Monroeville, last Saturday. She left home
on some errand and not returning the family became alarmed and started in
search of her and found her sitting in a fence corner dead.

Chancellor Foster was taken ill while holding court here
last week in consequence of which the court was adjourned and the Chancellor
returned home via Evergreen.

Our worthy tax assessor, Capt. F.M. Jones, thinks he will be
able to increase the tax assessment for this year $100,000.

Dr. R.I. Draughon of Perdue Hill delivered a lecture at the
courthouse Thursday night on the “Science of Language and English Composition.”
The attendance was quite small on account of the very inclement weather though
the lecture was none the less instructive because of that.

Light but continuous showers of rain have fallen here for
several days past, in consequence of which the roads are in a very disagreeable
condition.

Feb. 26, 1802 – French author Victor Hugo was born in
Besançon. His most famous books include “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” (1831)
and “Les Miserables” (1862).

Feb. 26, 1813 - Robert R. Livingston, a prominent Freemason
also known as "the Chancellor," passed away at the age of 66 in
Clermont, N.Y. and was buried in Tivoli, New York. In 1776, he represented the
Provincial Congress of New York at the Continental Congress and helped to draft
the Declaration of Independence. He also administered President George
Washington's first oath of office, and under President Thomas Jefferson, he
negotiated the Louisiana Purchase.

Feb. 26, 1832 – John George Nicolay, who would go on to
serve as President Abraham Lincoln’s private secretary and official biographer,
was born in Bavaria, Germany.

Feb. 26, 1836 – At the Alamo, a “norther” or cold front blew
in, dropping the temperature and bringing rain. James W. Fannin returned to
Goliad after learning that a column of Centralist Mexican troops under Col.
José Urrea was approaching that area, advancing northward from Matamoros.

Feb. 26, 1855 – In an incident attributed to the Bermuda
Triangle, the James B. Chester, a three-master, was found by the Marathon,
sailing aimlessly without her crew but with her sails set within the Sargasso
Sea.

Feb. 26, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Keytesville, Mo., and Confederate reconnaissance
was conducted as far as Nashville, Tenn.

Feb. 26, 1862 - Union soldier
Elisha Hunt Rhodes visited Washington, D.C., during a typical week in winter
quarters. Although combat was the main job of a soldier, most men serving in
the Civil War spent very few days each year in actual combat. Rhodes kept a
diary during his four years in the Union Army, and his notes reveal the
monotony of the winter months for the Army of the Potomac. A member of the 2nd
Rhode Island, Rhodes fought in every campaign from First Bull Run to
Appomattox, and rose from private to colonel in four years. On Feb. 26, 1862,
Rhodes went to hear Senator Henry Wilson from Massachusetts speak on expelling
disloyal members of Congress. After listening to the speech, Rhodes and his friend
Isaac Cooper attended a fair at a Methodist church and met two young women, who
the soldiers escorted home.

Feb. 26, 1863 - The National Currency Act was signed into
law by President Abraham Lincoln, creating a national banking system, a
Currency Bureau and the office of Comptroller of the Currency. The act's goal
was to establish a single currency.

Feb. 26, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Woodbury, Tenn. and at Germantown, Va.

Feb. 26, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought in the vicinity of Canton, Miss.; near Poplar
Bluff, Mo.; and at Sulphur Springs and Washington, Tenn.

Feb. 26, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at McMilley’s Farm, near Pine Bluff, Ark. and at
Lynch Creek and Stroud’s Mill, S.C.

Feb. 26, 1886 – The Monroe Journal reported that Jeff
Powell, against whom an indictment had been pending in the Circuit Court of
Monroe County for several years for assault with intent to murder, and who, a
few days before shot and seriously wounded James Kearley of Buena Vista, who
accompanied Deputy Sheriff Rhoad to his camp for the purpose of arresting
Powell, made his escape under cover of night. The citizens of Buena Vista
offered a reward of $150 for his capture and delivery to the sheriff. He was
accordingly captured on Tues., Feb. 23, about seven miles south of Camden by
the Messrs. Brooks and Martin who immediately brought him to Monroeville. He
was lodged in jail where he was as of Feb. 26, awaiting his trial.

Feb. 26, 1887 – National Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher
Grover Cleveland Alexander was born in Elba, Nebraska. He would go on to play
for the Philadelphia Phillies, the Chicago Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals. He
was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1838.

Feb. 26, 1896 - On this night in the northeast portion of
Monroe County, near Simpkinsville, Jake Petty, son of John Petty, was
assassinated by some party or parties unknown. Yancey Stinson was strongly
suspected of the crime due to an ongoing feud between Petty and Stinson. The
evidence adduced before the coroner’s jury tended to confirm the suspicion, and
a warrant has been sworn out charging Stinson with murder.

Feb. 26, 1909 – According to the Alabama League of
Municipalities, the Town of Frisco City, Ala. was officially incorporated as a
municipality.

Feb. 26, 1917 – The Original Dixieland Jazz Band recorded
the first jazz record, for the Victor Talking Machine Company in New York.

Feb. 26, 1917 - In a crucial step toward U.S. entry into World War I, President
Woodrow Wilson learned of the so-called Zimmermann Telegram, a message from
German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmermann to the German ambassador to Mexico
proposing a Mexican-German alliance in the event of a war between the U.S. and
Germany.

Feb. 26, 1919 – President Woodrow Wilson signed an act of
the U.S. Congress establishing most of the Grand Canyon as a United States
National Park, the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona.

Feb. 26, 1919 – During World War I, Army Pvt. John C. Sawyer
of Roy (present-day Frisco City, Ala.) “died from disease” at the age of 26 in
France. Born on March 13, 1892, he was a member of Co. B of the 308th
Artillery in France. He is buried in Shiloh Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery
in Frisco City.

Feb. 26, 1929 – President Calvin Coolidge signed an
Executive Order establishing the 96,000-acre Grand Teton National Park in
Wyoming.

Feb. 26, 1932 – Musician Johnny Cash was born in Kingsland,
Ark.

Feb. 26, 1935 - The New York Yankees released Babe Ruth, who
went on to sign with the Boston Braves for $20,000 and a share in the team's
profits.

Feb. 26, 1935 – Adolf Hitler ordered the Luftwaffe to be
re-formed, violating the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles.

Feb. 26, 1936 - Actual work began on this Monday on the
Standard Oil Co. service station at the intersection of West Front and Cooper
streets, following completion of negotiations and survey of the site, in
Evergreen, Ala.

Feb. 26, 1946 – Finnish observers reported the first of many
thousands of sightings of “ghost rockets.”

Feb. 26, 1965 - Ann Brooks Salter, age 50, died unexpectedly
at her residence on Liberty Hill Drive on this Friday morning. She was one of
the few women to ever hold elective office in Conecuh County, having served as
Circuit Clerk and Register. Mrs. Salter served as Circuit Clerk by appointment
in the 1940s, and as Deputy Clerk when her husband, who held the office, was
recalled to active Army duty during the Korean War. In 1952, when her husband
was on active duty and due to time limitations could not qualify for
re-election, she filed for the office and won it.

Feb. 26, 1965 - The first
contingent of South Korean troops arrived in Saigon.

Feb. 26, 1966 – During the Vietnam War, the ROK Capital
Division of the South Korean Army massacred 380 unarmed civilians in South
Vietnam.

Feb. 26, 1968 - Allied troops who
had recaptured the imperial capital of Hue from the North Vietnamese during the
Tet Offensive discovered the first mass graves in Hue.

Feb. 26, 1970 – National Public Radio was officially
incorporated on this day, when it replaced the National Educational Radio
Network.

Feb. 26, 1973 – The Sparta Academy Key Club received its
charter from the Evergreen Kiwanis Club.

Feb. 26, 1975 – Major League Baseball utility player Mark
DeRosa was born in Passaic, N.J. He would go on to play for the Atlanta Braves,
the Texas Rangers, the Chicago Cubs, the Cleveland Indians, the St. Louis
Cardinals, the San Francisco Giants, the Washington Nationals and the Toronto
Blue Jays.

Feb. 26, 1975 - On the Today Show, the first televised
kidney transplant took place.

Feb. 26, 1985 – The 11th Annual Miss Alpha Pageant at Sparta
Academy was held at 7:30 p.m. in the school’s gymnatorium in Evergreen, Ala.

Feb. 26, 1989 - The New York Yankees announced that Tom
Seaver would be their new TV sportscaster.

Feb. 26, 1991 – During the Gulf War, United States Army
forces captured the town of Al Busayyah.

Feb. 26, 1991 - Iraqi President Saddam Hussein announced on
Baghdad Radio that Iraqi troops were being withdrawn from Kuwait.

Feb. 26, 1999 – Two locations in Wilcox County were added to
the National Register of Historic Places. Those locations included the Dry Fork
Plantation at Coy and the Pine Apple Historic District in Pine Apple. The
historic district’s boundaries are roughly Wilcox County Roads 59, 7 and 61,
Broad Street, Banana Street, AL 10 and Adams Drive. It contains 3,350 acres, 54
buildings, and one structure.

Feb. 26, 2004 – The Alabama Senate received House Joint
Resolution No. 100, which proposed making Conecuh Ridge Alabama Fine Whiskey
the Alabama State Spirit. The Senate voted to approve it by two to one (14-6)
on March 9.

Feb. 26, 2006 - The U.S. Census Bureau's World Population
Clock ticked up to 6.5 billion people.

Feb. 26, 2010 - Sparta Academy’s Erica Palmer and Nick
Andrews were selected as members of the AISA All-Star Boys and Girls Basketball
Teams and played in the annual all-star games on this Friday at Huntingdon
College in Montgomery.

Feb. 26, 2010 - Hillcrest High School’s varsity softball
team opened the 2010 season with a 10-8 win over Monroe County High School on
this Friday in Monroeville. The Lady Jags put the game away in the top of the
seventh inning when junior second baseman Leslie Wiggins hit a clutch single
that drove in runners from second and third and gave Hillcrest the two-run win.
Hillcrest head coach Terry Gandy said Monday that he was more than a little
happy to start the season off with a win. Other standout players on Hillcrest’s
team that season included Amerisha Mixon, Victoria Walden, Sasha Rankins,
Trishana Lee, Shanika Taylor, Lakarress Riley, Kabrina Peters, Khadedra
Nettles, Crystal Meeks, Haley Drakeford and T’kiya Pittman.

Notes: Today is the 57th day of 2017 and the 67th day of Winter. There are 308 days left in the year.

Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily,
just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway
84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon
87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No.
AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.

Saturday, February 25, 2017

(For decades, local historian and paranormal investigator
George “Buster” Singleton published a weekly newspaper column called “Somewhere
in Time.” The column below, which was titled “Strange facts of the war that
history forgot to mention” was originally published in the Feb. 22, 2001 edition
of The Monroe Journal in Monroeville, Ala.)

Our history teachings of today give little or no thought to
the tragic and bloody sacrifices of that period in our history known as the
Civil War.

This period, from 1861 to 1865, was unlike any other event
that has taken place anywhere else in the world because of the circumstances
and happenings which caused this war to be different and unlike any war known
to mankind.

As for myself, I think the history of our dreaded Civil War
should be taught in greater detail, due to the fact that with this teaching, our
youth would have a greater knowledge of this period of our history.

Many unanswered questions that we face today could be
answered and many mysteries of this time would be solved. This article is
dedicated to those of my readers who care about our history and those who
search for many answers.

Here are some oddities of this bloody war that might open
some eyes.

In 1861, Wilmer McLean, distressed that a cannonball had
crashed through his home during the battle of Bull Run, moved to a farm where “the
sound of battle would never again reach him and his family.”

Almost four years later, McLean’s Appomattox Courthouse home
was used for General Lee’s surrender to General Grant. There wasn’t any damage
from cannonballs, but souvenir-hunting Union officers stripped his house of
almost all of its furniture.

When Sam and Keith Blalock joined the 26th North
Carolina Regiment, they claimed to be old friends who were distantly related.
It was months before anyone discovered Sam’s real name was Malinda. When Keith
signed up to fight the Yankees, his wife put on man’s attire and went to war
with him.

After the Confederacy was defeated, Jefferson Davis was
stripped of his citizenship. He died as a man without a country. His
citizenship was restored by Congress during the administration of President
Jimmy Carter.

Major General George A. Custer, only wounded one time during
the bloody conflict, had 11 horses shot from under him. Confederate Major
General Joseph Wheeler continued to fight after having 16 horses killed under
him. Still, the all-time record seems to have been set by General Nathan
Bedford Forrest. After a thorough study of the matter, Brigadier General James
R. Chalmers reported that Forrest was under fire more than 100 times during
which 36 horses were shot from under him.

A later analysis, now widely accepted, led to the conclusion
that General Forrest actually had a total of 39 horses killed under him while
he was in the saddle.

Unlike the Confederates, the Union cavalrymen were usually
provided with a government-owned horse. There were a few exceptions.

By October 1861, virtually all units of the Union Army were
furnished animals owned by the government. By October 1862, the federal
government owned about 150,000 horses and 100,000 mules.

During the first two years of the fighting, Union cavalry
units, which never had more than 60,000 men in the field, were supplied with
about 240,000 horses. Before General Lee surrendered, federal funds had paid
for an estimated 840,000 horses and at least 430,000 mules.

Even then, politics played an important role in the
decisions as to who went to war and those who were exempt from the draft.

Shielded from battle because he was the son of the
president, college student Robert Todd Lincoln was at a New Jersey railroad
station waiting to board a train. Forced by the mass of many other passengers
to lean from the waiting platform against the side of the train, he suddenly
felt it begin to move.

The motion of the train spun young Lincoln off his feet and
caused him to slide downward into the open space between the car and the
platform. Suspended helplessly, he suddenly felt a hand grab his coat and lift
him to safety.

Turning around to thank the bystander who had rescued him,
he recognized the famous actor Edwin Booth, the brother of the man who, a few
months later, would take the life of his father.

After Union General William T. Sherman burned and destroyed
the city of Atlanta, Ga., he began his famous March to the Sea. He decided that
he and his army would burn a path 100 miles wide across the South and destroy
all farm houses and mules and horses in his path.

During this march, he destroyed many homes, along with many
crops in the fields. His army killed over 15,000 farm horses and over 18,000
mules that were used to cultivate the farm land along his march route.

Following his army were between 600 to 700 freed slaves.
Sherman’s army and the freed slaves pillaged the farms and destroyed an
estimated 60 tons of cured meat that they took from the destroyed farm’s
families.

By the time the army reached Ebenezer Creek just outside
Savannah, Ga., there was no food for the followers of Sherman’s army.

The followers were eating spilled rice swept from the wagon
beds that had been taken from the farms along the way.

The stream named Ebenezer Creek was really a wide stream of
water as wide as a river. No one to this day knows why the stream was called a
creek.

Sherman ordered flatboats to be constructed for his army to
cross the stream on. After all the army and its equipment and animals had been
ferried across, the flatboats were sent back to bring across the 600 or so
freed slaves.

As the flatboats reached midstream, Sherman ordered his
cannons to open fire on the loaded flatboats. None of those aboard the boats
lived to reach the shore.

History describes Sherman as a gentle and kind soldier. Our
history fails to mention also that upon an occasion when some of Sherman’s
riflemen killed three Confederate soldiers in a small skirmish, Sherman ordered
the three bodies to be placed in a large hog pen nearby, to be eaten by the
hungry hogs rather than take the time to bury them. Truly, indeed, Sherman was
a kind and gentle man.

History also forgets to mention that the largest slave owner
in the South was a black man by the name of Lanier who lived in southern
Louisiana. He owned over 4,000 of his own people. Also, the largest slave
trader in the world was a black man by the name of Sinque. This black slave
trader sold over two million of his own people.

If our teaching of history continues on the path that we
follow today, within a very short time, the true stories of the dreadful years
of our Civil War will have faded into oblivion. And the many who lie sleeping
in the thousands of unknown graves throughout our nation will forever be
forgotten.

History will rewrite our past, not like it actually
happened, but like we wanted it to happen.

(Singleton, the author
of the 1991 book “Of Foxfire and Phantom Soldiers,” passed away at the age of
79 on July 19, 2007. A longtime resident of Monroeville, he was born on Dec.
14, 1927 in Marengo County, graduated from Sweet Water High School, served in
the Korean War, lived for a time among Apache Indians, moved to Monroe County
in June 1964 (some sources say 1961) and served as the administrator of the
Monroeville National Guard unit from 1964 to 1987. For years, Singleton’s
column “Somewhere in Time” appeared in The Monroe Journal, and he wrote a
lengthy series of articles about Monroe County that appeared in Alabama Life
magazine. Some of his earlier columns also appeared under the heading of
“Monroe County History: Did You Know?” He is buried in Pineville Cemetery in
Monroeville. The column above and all of Singleton’s other columns are
available to the public through the microfilm records at the Monroe County
Public Library in Monroeville. Singleton’s columns are presented here each week
for research and scholarship purposes and as part of an effort to keep his work
and memory alive.)